Damaged (Maggie O'Dell #8)

Maggie winced. She hadn’t intentionally meant to deflect the question.

“I don’t think it’s that big of a mystery,” Maggie said. “I can’t handle not being in control.”

“Are you always in control when you face off against a killer?”

“Of course. I carry a gun.” Back to brevity and humor. Keep it light, she told herself. Someone gets too close, resort to wit.

“Or maybe in the air you’re just vulnerable enough to realize all the risks you take every single day on the ground.”

Maggie stared at her, suddenly disarmed.

“Come on, let’s walk.” Liz stood and pointed to the moonlit beach. “If Isaac hits, this might be the last time we enjoy Pensacola Beach for a very long time.”

Just as Maggie pushed off her barstool a man stumbled over to their table, grabbing the edge and jiggling the empty beer bottles.

“Hey, E-liz-a-beth.” He purposely enunciated her name, stringing it out in his inebriated attempt at song.

“Scott?”

“Oh hey.” He stopped himself when he saw Maggie, as if only then noticing there was someone else at the table. “Sorry.” He grinned, looking from Liz to Maggie and back. “I didn’t realize you were on a date.”





CHAPTER 27





When Maggie offered to buy the aircrew drinks, she honestly didn’t think they would show up. It was late. Maybe she should have offered dinner. Food had been the last thing on her mind after a second landing at Baptist Hospital to deliver the injured boater and his two dogs. Now, despite having examined the rancid cooler, she found herself hungry.

While she waited, she checked her phone messages. The Escambia County medical examiner would be processing the body parts at nine tomorrow morning. He gave Maggie directions.

She text-messaged Wurth to join them for drinks, to be her backup, but his quick response was


Prob not happenin. Catch ya at brkfst?


Maggie hated deciphering text messages. Still none from Tully and she had to remind herself that it was Sunday. Identifying the rope wasn’t a matter of life and death. It was just one of those things that nagged at her. When the aircrew arrived, they sat down around her at the table as though meeting another inquisition.

“Just one question,” Maggie told them. “I promise. Have any of you ever seen a tie-down like that on a fishing cooler?”

“Commercial fishermen use a stainless-steel contraption.” It was Tommy Ellis who answered. “One end hooks into the cooler, the other into the floor of the boat. There’s a turnbuckle in the middle to tighten it. I noticed this cooler had a pre-molded slot for it. A marine professional would use something like that, something more secure and certainly more sophisticated than a rope, even an unusual rope.”

Everyone at the table was staring at Ellis by the time he finished, like he had just revealed some long-hidden secret.

“What?” Ellis shrugged. “My uncle’s a shrimper.”

After one drink Kesnick called it quits. He needed to get home to his wife and kids. The pilots, Wilson and Ellis, had another but then gravitated to the beach bar next door.

“We’ll be right back,” they said after spotting someone they knew.

From the look of things Maggie didn’t expect them to return anytime soon. She didn’t mind. And Liz Bailey looked much more comfortable with her crew gone. She had showered and her short hair, still damp in the humidity, was sticking up in places. She wore khaki shorts and a white sleeveless shirt. Maggie couldn’t help thinking that the clothes were fitted just enough to remind Liz’s crew she really wasn’t one of them. Maggie remembered the discussion back in the helicopter. The men strategizing the rescue and leaving out the opinion of its chief architect—the rescue swimmer.

“This is a new aircrew for you,” Maggie said to Liz.

“That obvious?”

“Not really,” she said, realizing she might sound presumptuous. She wiped at the condensation on the bottle of beer she’d been nursing for the last half hour. She wanted to guzzle it. The air was stifling and it was long past sundown. “I get paid the big bucks to figure out psychological stuff like that.”

She was pleased to see Liz Bailey smile for the first time since they’d met.

“What do you expect when you put four type-A personalities together in a helicopter. It’s okay, though,” Liz said, pausing to take a sip of her beer. “By now I’m used to having to prove myself.”

“For what it’s worth, they were really worried about you.”

“Really?”

“Yes, really.”

“When they were worried what did they call me?”

“What do you mean?”

“Did they say, ‘How’s Bailey?’ Or ‘Is the rescue swimmer okay?’”